Safety’s booming for the birds

by Phoebe Dey

This animated effigy of a peregrine falcon helps keep migratory birds away from oilsands waste.

This animated effigy of a peregrine falcon helps keep migratory birds away from oilsands waste.


February 28, 2006 - A fake falcon and a radar-activated cannon work better at keeping birds away from oilsands waste than the current system, according to research from the University of Alberta.

Oilsands mining is one of several industrial activities that produces waste dangerous to waterfowl. The birds, such as ducks, geese and swans, are attracted to freshwater ponds for foraging, roosting and nesting, and as stopover sites during migration.

Spring migration is a particular problem in north-eastern Alberta, when the warm-water waste from the mining forms tailing ponds from oil sands mines are the only open water - the natural bodies are still frozen. When waterfowl land in these ponds, they may ingest oil and their plumage may become oiled with waste bitumen, potentially preventing birds from flying or leading to lost insulation and death from hypothermia. Deterrents currently being used are not always successful because wildlife either ignore them or get used to them.

Dr. Colleen Cassady St. Clair from the U of A's Faculty of Science and her former undergraduate student, Rob Ronconi, compared the industry standard - randomly firing cannons and stationary human effigies - to a radar-activated system which fires cannons and also activates large peregrine falcon effigies only when birds approach. The radar detects the birds and relays the information to a computer that automatically deploys the deterrents.

Ronconi led the fieldwork and observed almost 8,000 birds during the experiment, which took place in northern Alberta near Fort McMurray. The research has just been published in the Journal of Applied Ecology.

St. Clair and Ronconi found the radar system more effective at deterring birds from landing and later learned the cannons were even more effective than the peregrines. Part of the reason, said St. Clair, may be that the birds are less likely to habituate to the cannons because they are not fired all the time but only when the birds approach. The radar system is currently being used by Albian Sands Energy.

"This system could be helpful in deterring birds from industrial ponds and we have suggested some potential applications for oil spills at sea," said St. Clair. "In the oilsands, several hundred birds are probably oiled each year and that number might reach the thousands in some spring conditions."

The system was also able to detect four times as many birds as visual sightings and could also detect the animals at night - particularly critical for bird deterrence because shorebirds, ducks and geese are nocturnal. But although the research shows promise for radar-activated on-demand deterrents, bird deterrence is not the long-term solution, said St. Clair. In addition to deterrence, the oilsands industry is committed to the reclamation of mines and tailings ponds post-production and is also developing processes that will negate the need for hazardous ponds.

"The problem will be reduced in time as the oilsands move to technologies that do not produce tailings ponds but that technology is likely to be at least 10 years away," said St. Clair. "In the meantime, on-demand cannon deterrent systems offer the potential of better avian deterrence at industrial sites."

Address of this ExpressNews article:
http://www.expressnews.ualberta.ca/article.cfm?id=7367

Related Internal Links

Dr. Colleen Cassady St. Clair’s U of A website
http://www.biology.ualberta.ca/faculty/colleen_cassady_stclair/

University of Alberta Faculty of Science
http://www.uofaweb.ualberta.ca/science/

Related External Links

Albian Sands Energy Inc
http://www.albiansands.ca/